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ProSort 400 Elite SeriesHytrol’s ProSort 400 Family of sorters is specifically designed to handle high-speed applications where product diverting needs to be both positive and gentle. The ProSort 421 is designed to sort products at a 22 degree angle where higher speeds are required and close divert centers are not so critical, speeds of 700 FPM are possible. The ProSort 431 is designed to sort products at a 30 degree angle where close divert centers are required and speeds of 350 FPM are possible. The ProSort Elite series is solely offered as single-sided, diverting positively from left or right-hand sides.

Collaboration isn't a new concept. What is new is how we collaborate. Innovative technologies such as social collaboration platforms, mobility applications and intelligent analytics and dashboards have become much more prominent within the supply chain. During this webcast we'll explore how combining these innovations with end-to-end supply chain visibility creates…

That’s the case with Boscov’s Department Stores, the largest independent department-store chain in the nation. Boscov’s, still family-owned today, with $1.2 billion in annual sales is headquartered in Reading, Pa.

MMH first visited Boscov’s 395,000 sq ft distribution center in 2004. Back then, Boscov’s faced a bottleneck in its distribution processes: Due to limitations in its materials handling processes, Boscov’s could receive almost twice as many cartons per hour as it could ship out. That not only slowed the delivery of product to the store, it required Boscov’s to devote valuable space to staging. That restricted the chain’s ability to grow its business without a significant investment in more warehouse space.

The solution: Instead of adding space, Boscov’s added automation, including a three-divert sliding shoe pre-sorter, the splitting of an existing pop-up shipping sorter into two units, and new scanning and control systems.

“On paper, the improvements may seem rather minor,” we wrote at the time. “But the dividends of the project have already been dramatic in just the first few months since its completion.” Those dividends included:

A nearly 10% reduction in distribution costs, and a 25% increase in throughput (200,000 cartons per week compared to 150,000) with no addition to headcount. But the biggest payoff may have been the capability to cross-dock the vast majority of product in record time. “Our shipments can be in receiving and out the door within 7 minutes,” the retailer told us at the time.

Fast-forward a few years, and Boscov’s found itself facing a bottleneck all over again. “Between 2003 and 2006, we grew the chain 25%, from 40 to 50 stores, including the acquisition of a number of stores from Macy’s,” says Bob Goonan, Boscov’s director of logistics. “We couldn’t add space to our existing distribution center and we didn’t want to build a new facility. So, we needed a way to maximize the flow of product within our existing facility.”

Working with a systems integrator (Blesco), Goonan and his team came up with a new design that will be implemented in two phases: The first, in place now, added additional sortation capabilities and eighteen dock doors to accommodate a total of 58 stores. The second phase, which will be implemented in the next few years, will handle an additional 20 stores, allowing the chain to grow to 78 stores.

Once again, the changes seem simple on paper, but, as with the previous makeover, they are already delivering big dividends:

Capacity increased by 25% with no addition to headcount.

Cost per unit dropped by 8%.

The units handled per hour increased by 12%.

Better yet, cross-docked cartons that once took 7 minutes to travel from the receiving dock to the shipping dock now make the journey in just six minutes.

“The bottleneck is gone,” says Goonan. “We can now have the capacity to ship out about 25% more cartons per day than we receive during peak periods.”

A growing chain
The Boscov’s story is one of growth driving change. For the first sixty years of its history, Boscov’s consisted of one store in Reading, Pa. In 1962, the company began its expansion program, building three more stores in the Reading area over the next six years.

Out of town expansion began in August 1972 with the opening of a store in Lebanon, Pa. By 2003, the chain had increased to 40 stores. By 2006, there were 50 stores in Boscov’s portfolio.

The chain has prospered as a regional player in an increasingly competitive retail environment by continuing to offer a full line of products – from major appliances and furniture to electronics, clothing and collectibles – by catering to the needs of its customers. “As a regional department store, we understand our customers,” says Goonan. “We rate very high on customer service.”

One key to maintaining those high customer service numbers is the ability to have the right merchandise in the store at the right times, especially around peak periods including the patio season, back-to-school and holidays. “As the supply chain has sped up, goods arrive at the distribution center much closer to the time when they’re needed in the store,” says Goonan.

With the chain continuing to grow, that became an issue. “We were taking product in our receiving area,” says Goonan. “But because there wasn’t a fluid movement of product, we spent more time and effort handling it. That was lowering our units handled per hour and raising our cost per unit.”

With more growth planned for the future, it was time to redesign the existing system again.

Building on success
To meet the demands of the new stores, the systems integrator designed a system that builds on the 2003 project, while allowing for future expansion.

“We decided to work within the existing four walls and to maximize the receiving sorter we installed in 2003,” says Goonan. “We also wanted the ability to handle 78 stores in the future in part by expanding to a second shift.”

The first step was to add twelve dock doors, bringing the total to 58 doors. The second step was to add a second sorter with seventeen diverts. Designed to process 135 cases per minute, the sorter manages inbound freight from five receiving doors and sorts outbound cartons to twelve doors. One of the five receiving lanes can also divert cartons to another sorter that manages processing to the other 46 store lanes. The original sorter is now used as a single divert to sort cartons to the new sorter.

There have been other changes as well.
ASN’s and compliance labeling: Boscov’s continues to increase the percentage of shipments with ASN’s and compliant labeling that enables cross-docking, from 65% of shipments in 2003 to 75% today.

Palletizing: While containerized freight comes into the facility floor-loaded, Boscov’s has aggressively worked to have more freight palletized. “With pallets, we can move a lot of product quickly to a processing table and onto the shipping sorter,” says Goonan.

Put it together, and the new system enables Boscov’s to keep its stores stocked with the inventory and products its customers have come to expect. “With these changes, we can now get product in the distribution center at 7 in the morning and have it on the floor of the stores the next day,” says Goonan. “Without them, I’m not sure we could compete.”

This article previously appeared in the June 2008 issue of Modern Materials Handling

About the Author

Bob TrebilcockExecutive Editor

Bob Trebilcock, executive editor, has covered materials handling, technology and supply chain topics for Modern Materials Handling since 1984. More recently, Trebilcock became editorial director of Supply Chain Management Review. A graduate of Bowling Green State University, Trebilcock lives in Keene, NH. He can be reached at 603-357-0484.

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In light of the growth of e-commerce-and the fact that consumers and businesses are buying again, many of the discussions that we had at ProMat 2015 didn't revolve around the products and the equipment on display as much as it did the supplemental technology and solutions that are designed to optimize systems in an effort to work "smarter."